E Leaning Literature Review 0908
Transcript of E Leaning Literature Review 0908
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Putting Learning Back into E-LearningA Survey of Good Practice in E-Learning
Executive Summary
To date, e-learning has been a largely under-utilised training and educational tool in the aged care
industry despite the obvious advantages it would bring. In recognition of this, Aged and
Community Services Australia (ACSA) determined to explore and support the use of e-learning by
aged care organisations. ACSA was successful in attracting funding from the Department of
Employment, Education and Workplace Relations to develop an aged care industry plan to:
Embed e-learning, and its principles, into workforce development plans; and Identify strategies to assist the sector to realise the full potential of e-learning.
This literature review focuses on the barriers to the uptake of online training or e-learning in the
aged care industry, and the critical factors that will support its dissemination.
Barriers to e-learning are explored here under two principal headings: the barriers that inhibit the
uptake of e-learning by employees, and the barriers that inhibit employers from offering e-learning
to their workforce. We find that blended models of e-learning are universally deemed to be the
most successful, combining the convenience of online platforms with the advantages that come
from learning in groups with ready, interactive access to mentors, tutors, and other learning support
services, on either a face-to-face basis or through videoconferencing or Web3 interactive
technologies. Comprehensive induction and orientation to technology, and ongoing technological
guidance are fundamental to successful e-learning for older adult learners. The interaction that
occurs between adult learners is a critical factor in maintaining the engagement of participants.
The review focuses on the barriers that may militate against the successful participation in e-
learning of populations who make up the bulk of the aged care workforce: mature or older workers,
women, people (predominantly women) of non-English speaking backgrounds, and Indigenous
persons. The aged care industry is also keen to attract school leavers and tertiary graduates, hence
barriers that might affect the participation of younger people in e-learning are also considered.
Despite the prevalent myth that older female workers are not keen participants in e-learning, many
are well aware of the need to upgrade their skills and qualifications and are eager to participate
when their particular needs are addressed, including their need for appropriate technological
orientation, for literacy and/or English language support, for courses that acknowledge their existingshop floor competency and professional expertise, and for courses that take account of their non-
work time and energy commitments. Self-efficacy and self-confidence are more critical factors
associated with successful e-learning than factors such as age, gender, previous computer
experience, home computer ownership, job position, education levels, ethnicity or English language
competency, though each of these factors may have to be actively addressed. Best practice e-
learning programs have established that while each of these factors may provide an initial barrier,
they can be neutralised or turned to advantage when directly addressed through careful planning of
the introductory stages of programs and program design. Older workers want e-learning that
stretches but does not stress them, and they prefer e-learning that brings them into contact with
other learners, creating communities of practice. Employers who recognise e-learning as a shared
investment by workers and management, who provide their staff with computer access andallocated e-learning time, and who actively champion e-learning in their workplace, are likely to
reap the very substantial benefits of e-learning.
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Effective online pedagogies for people with limited English language literacy are now well
established, and may in fact provide a platform for enhanced language and literacy competence
amongst the workforce. Non-mainstream e-learners have a right to expect cultural sensitivity and
sensitivity to their language needs and these can be delivered through custom-designed e-learning.
E-learning enables us to move beyond one-size-fits-all programs, fostering the inclusion of
culturally and locally relevant materials and issues.
The Australian Flexible Learning Framework (AFLF) has an Indigenous Engagement strategy
designed to address the high drop-out rate of Indigenous e-learners, and to bring the needs of
Indigenous e-learners into focus.
Young e-learners, in general, have quite distinct preferences in terms of program design and
presentation from older e-learners. While older learners are likely to want predictable navigation
across a site, younger learners are likely to favour a game approach that requires them to choose
how they navigate, has high levels of interactivity and is polyfocal, with scenarios that are
relevant to their own experience. They want e-learning that is learner-directed rather than teacher-
directed.
Technologies now enable the modification of e-learning program templates to include local issues,
business or situation specific scenarios, locally relevant examples, problems and questions, as well
as material to be customised for diverse target populations. The most successful programs see
information and computer technologists come together with experienced teachers or industry
trainers to talk through the specific needs of an e-learning program, and the specific needs of the
target population of learners: the best programs are custom built for the target learner group, and
actively address issues around access and equity. Some programs have seen the originating
committee act as guinea pigs conducting their meetings online and road-testing programs as if
they were e-learners, identifying and addressing problems and issues before courses are launched.
Despite this, some major barriers remain. Technological connectivity remains an issue beyond
Australias capital cities, and is especially an issue in remote Australia, compounding rural and
Indigenous disadvantage in particular. There is also a lack of professional development
opportunities for e-learning teachers and program designers. Registered Training Organisations
(RTOs) have, in many cases, been slow to come on board with e-learning. There is, in addition, still
a tendency for technology to direct program design, but there has recently been a call to put the
focus back on the learning aspect of e-learning, and to give more prominence to the voices of
experienced adult educationalists in e-learning. Online pedagogy is now recognised as a specific
area of teaching expertise.
The AFLF has found that only about 12% of small businesses in Australia provide structured e-
learning opportunities for their staff. For employers, the major barriers to e-learning involvement
include the cost of technology, the belief that courses will not be specific to their training needs,
resistance to change in some cases, a lack of knowledge about e-learning, and a lack of knowledge
about how to go about setting up e-learning. Researchers have identified the need for local area or
business-type e-learning champions, providing opportunities for e-learning-based skills and
knowledge sharing, and the development of industry-specific and locally relevant e-learning options
that show what e-learning looks like in practice. Again, the seeding of e-learning communities of
practice is essential if e-learning is to take hold in small business in Australia, including the aged
care sector.
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1. Introduction
E-learning is a largely under-utilised training and educational tool in the aged care industry despite
the obvious advantages it can bring. In recognition of this Aged and Community Services Australia
(ACSA) determined to explore and support the use of e-learning by aged care organisations. ACSA
was successful in attracting funding from the Department of Employment, Education and
Workplace Relations to develop an aged care industry plan to:
Embed e-learning, and its principles, into workforce development plans; and Identify strategies to assist the sector to realise the full potential of e-learning.
This literature review focuses on the barriers, and critical factors, to the uptake of online training or
e-learning in the aged care industry.
2. Methodology
The literature search was conducted using Google and Google Scholarfor population groups whichfeature strongly in the (potential and actual) aged care workforce and are likely to experience
barriers in relation to e-learning. These population groups are:
mature or older workers; women; people (predominantly women) from non-English speaking backgrounds; workers in rural and remote Australia; and Indigenous workers
These people may be currently working in aged care, working in another field, or may be currently
out of the workforce, by choice or by circumstance.
Another potential, but as yet largely untapped, source of workforce for aged care is younger people,
including secondary school and tertiary graduates.
Likely hits were given a preliminary relevance screen using search terms lifelong learning
mature older women gender English language barrier problem unable disadvantage
and similar search word combinations. What we were looking for was a cross-match between aged
care and barriers to up-take of e-learning. Virtually no Australian documents highlighted that cross-
match. International sites similarly provided no leads that linked aged care and e-learning.
The most fruitful source of research, case studies and good practice guidelines in relation to barriers
to participation in e-learning were located at theAustralian Flexible Learning Framework(AFLF)
website. Since Kaye Bowman and Peter Kearns (December 2007:4) found that Australian literature
on the subject of e-learning for mature age/adult learners is not well developed, theAustralian
Flexible Learning Frameworkhas released a considerable body of research on barriers to the uptake
of e-learning by various population groups that feature strongly in aged care workforce profiles,
particularly older workers. Older workers became a specific client target group for the Framework
in 2007. Other target populations include Indigenous workers and young workers. General
research publications on barriers to the uptake of e-learning by these target groups can fairly readily
be interpreted into an aged care workforce framework. There is also considerable literature on
technical barriers to e-learning, for example, how to configure help facilities to make them userfriendly, and on pedagogical issues. These sorts of technical barriers and good practice responses
are beyond the scope of this review.
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At the suggestion of Kerry Manikis (at AFLFsE-learning for Industry) we also surveyed the 2007
satisfaction reports for currently funded e-learning business case demonstration projects, to draw
out transferable lessons from those projects.
3. Barriers & Strategies for Successful E-learning
There are two principal domains of barriers to e-learning. There are the barriers that prevent
potential trainees taking up e-learning when offered by an employer, and there are barriers that
prevent employers offering and promoting e-learning amongst their staff. This review deals with
each separately. A number of papers survey the barriers to employee uptake of e-learning but few
consider the barriers that inhibit employers uptake.
3.1 Employees
This section considers the different types of current and potential aged care employees and
the barriers to e-learning they face, and identifies some successful strategies or good practice
to support. The emphasis is on older workers given the current, and likely future,
composition of the aged care workforce.
Older Workers and e-learning
Amongst the four e-learning for mature learners case studies evaluated by Bowman and Kearns
(November 2007) was the Certificate III Aged Care e-learning program designed specifically for
mature aged students of the Barrier Reef Institute of TAFE, Queensland. The model incorporates
many of the key learnings from earlier studies and provides a good stepping-off point for this
review of barriers to e-learning.
The Barrier Reef TAFE Certificate III in Aged Care consists of a blended e-learning model for
delivery across six regional communities to 83 mature aged women returning to the workforce in
Queensland, from Palm Island to Charters Towers. Interactive e-learning provides the perfect
vehicle for delivering training across thin markets where there are only a few students at any
single centre. The program employed videoconferencing, local nurse-tutors, individual learner
support from TAFE, face-to-face gatherings of the students in each community, and employed past
graduates as mentors. The return to learning was navigated through a series of easy steps which
actively built self-esteem and confidence in using information and computer technology (ICT). The
program began with a face-to-face orientation and induction to the technology. A literacy support
unit provided support in each location. The program was supported locally by an e-learningchampion with an interest in the pedagogical parameters of the program (Bowman and Kearns
Nov 2007: 12).
Bowman and Kearns found that this combination of distance e-learning and face-to-face,
individually supported social learning has very significant potential in meeting the needs of mature
aged workers, including people returning to the workforce (Bowman and Kearns December
2007:10). The most critical success factor demonstrated in this Barrier Reef program is:
about connecting and socialising our use of computing and making it more personal. The tools are important
but the connecting networks of people, data and services that are emerging around them is what this is
really about (Bowman and Kearns December 2007: 10, quoting Becta 2007).
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This emphasis on connecting and socialising in e-learning is repeated in Jasinskis key finding
that there is a shift away from the e [in e-learning] and back to learning, a shift from
exploring technology tools to a better understanding of e-learner pedagogies, client perspectives
and demonstration of good examples of working models in local contexts (Jasinski 2007: 5).
Debunking stereotypes that inhibit uptake of e-learning
The success of mature-age students in e-learning programs such as those surveyed by Bowman and
Kearns including the Barrier Reef TAFE program challenges the powerful stereotype that older
learners, and older female workers in particular will not, and cannot, learn new skills and concepts.
Bowman and Kearns found that this stereotype affects the confidence of older learners themselves,
andthe likelihood that training managers will consider training options for older workers. US
researcher Rod Githens, (2007) also finds that employers of older workers are often reluctant to pay
for training because of stereotypes about older workers (especially older women) being not up to e-
learning. In fact, a study by Lundberg and Marshallsay (2007, cited in Bowman and Kearns
December 2007: 14) found that mature workers are often eager learners of IT skills, adventurous
and keen. More than one-third of mature aged Australian workers rated very positively on a
continuum of attitudes to taking on formal learning, with 21% in the learning leaders group andanother 17% in the learn to earn group who are strongly committed to continuing or resuming
vocational education as a necessary pathway to employment (Bowman and Kearns December 2007:
18, citing ANTA 2000). Bowman and Kearns (Executive Summary December 2007) found that
older workers capacities and motivations for learning are ranged across the same continuum as the
whole-of-community, from those who are not engaged, to those who are fully engaged passionate
learners with a high capacity to take on new learning and new challenges. These findings are
supported by the AFLFs 2007 E-learning Benchmark Project E-learning for mature aged
learners (I&J Management Services November 2007).
Older adult learners do have particular needs that should be incorporated into training programs.
They want flexibility in learning demands and time commitments, supportive and supported
learning environments, and learning that actively and positively addresses their often initially low
levels of technical competency. Older learners may also need literacy support and programs that
incorporate adult learning strategies. Bowman and Kearns found that older learners want learning
opportunities that stretch but [do] not stress them (Bowman and Kearns December 2007:15).
Those mature aged workers who engage with learning after a period of disengagement, and those
who come to formal vocational learning for the first time, bring their fears, barriers and resistance
to the class and these need to be worked with positively (Bowman and Kearns December 2007:16).
The Barrier Reef program addressed each of these needs.
Bowman and Kearns found that when appropriately presented and adapted to the specific needs andpreferences of older learners, the benefits of e-learning in general are becoming increasingly
recognised especially with regard to older workers (Executive Summary: 3). Domain Aged Cares
Lyn Turner has similarly observed a tipping point marking a new acceptance of e-learning within
our sector amongst older workers (Domain media release).
Skills, Confidence and Self-efficacy
Bowman and Kearns interviewed a range of VET and TAFE teachers and managers to identify
barriers to e-learning for older workers. In addition to the barrier created by false stereotyping, they
identified a number of other barriers to the entry of mature aged workers into the e-learning
community and to their successful and confident completion of training. Working out of NewYorks Masie Center, an international think-tank dedicated to exploring the intersections of
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learning and technology, Penina Mungania used the Barriers in E-learning and Self-Efficacy
(BELSE) survey tool to gauge e-learner barriers against 12 factors:
education; self-efficacy; age; gender; computer training; job position; computer ownership; computer competence; study location; organisation; ethnicity; and previous e-learning experience (Mungania: 3, 16).
She found that ageper se is not a barrier to successful e-learning outcomes, provided the learning
needs of older learners are directly and positively addressed in the design of e-learning trainingprograms. Bowman and Kearns, and Mungania were in substantial agreement as to the principle
barriers to e-learning for mature age e-learners.
While lack of ICT skills, low educational completion levels, computer literacy and prior ICT
experience are often seen as the strongest barrier to mature aged workers, and potential workers,
taking on ICT-based training, both Bowman and Kearns, and Mungania, found that lack of
confidence, or a low sense of self-efficacy, is actually a more critical factor affecting the uptake of
e-learning. Self-efficacy is not concerned with skills but measures the judgements of what one can
do. Highly self-efficacious students [are] usually quicker to discard faulty strategies and to display
more positive attitudes towards a subject (Mungania: 39). Self-efficacy influences task choice,
amount of effort one puts into a task, persistence and perseverance in the face of obstacles,behaviour, motivation, performance, attitudes, outcome expectations, success or failure, nature of
feedback received, psychosocial functioning, and perceived e-learning barriers (Mungania 39-40).
When self-efficacy is actively fostered in e-learning programs, ICT skills can be learned even by
mature learners with little or no previous ICT experience and low educational levels. Mature-age e-
learners do not need or want to become ICT wiz kids. Mastery of a limited range of task-specific
skills will equip them quite adequately for successful e-learning.
Self-efficacy can be fostered by appropriate skills training, and coaching in time management skills
early on in the course. Interventions may need to be in place to support or build that sense of self-
efficacy, including nurturing feedback, and positive reinforcement, recognition of participants
efforts by managers including awards, certification, or other incentives. Self-efficacy does notnecessarily correlate with skills, therefore it is necessary to provide positive experiences in the
initial stages of the e-learning process as a platform for the positive sense of self-efficacy that will
support problem-solving and independent learning at later stages (Mungania: 48-9). Mungania
suggests pairing new e-learning participants with successful past participants as mentors. She also
advocates the creation of e-learning communities where people can come together for support and
experience sharing (Mungania: 50).
Situational barriers
Life circumstances, lack of time, time management issues, prior commitments to multiple roles andresponsibilities, interruptions during study (whether at home or at work) also loom large amongst
the factors that inhibit uptake, and these may be especially pertinent barriers for older women
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(Mungania 34, after Kramarae 2001). In contrast, factors such as age, ethnicity, level of education,
prior experience with computers and e-learning, computer ownership, location of study and job
position are notstatistically significant predictors of barriers to e-learning (Mungania:
Executive Summary, 5, 6, 20). Mangania notes, however (after Feldhaus 1999), that social factors
that can prescribe disadvantage often come in clusters. Feldhaus (1999) found that in the US,
ethnicity has a significant relationship with ones education level and impacted in turn on uptake
of e-learning. On the face of it, lower educational levels may impact on ability to engage in e-learning in Australia as well as in the US, but Mungania, and Bowman and Kearns found that low
educational completion is not a barrier to e-learning success, provided appropriate induction and
computer training occurs.
Lack of access to a computer at home or being unable to find time for e-learning at home will not
necessarily impact on e-learning capacity, provided the workplace makes computers available to e-
learners in work time. Employer support for e-learning, signified by allowing work time for e-
learning and providing on-site computer access, is a positive incentive for uptake of such training
(Bowman and Kearns December 2007: 24).
Lack of a home computer may, however, mean that comprehensive induction and skillsenhancement will be a necessity within e-learning. Domain Aged Cares Lyn Turner has observed,
significantly, that mature workers with computer savvy teenage and twenty-something children at
home, are cashing in on the presence of these on-site home-based tutors to pick up on some
basic e-learning competencies, raising their confidence in their own abilities to take on formal e-
learning (Domain media release). For potential e-learners without this home resource, one-to-one
ICT support must be built in as a fundamental component of training. The River Murray Training
P/L program based at Berri, which piloted online training for mature age rural workers affected by
drought, found that trainees new to IT required hands-on direct assistance that by-passed the
internet interface, and this proved quite a challenge (Hollis and Bass: 3).
Mungania also noted differing results from research in regard to the effects of low levels of
education. Her own finding is that this is not a barrier to e-learning success, but she cites Feldhaus
(1999) who found that educational background was the most significant factor causing barriers [to
uptake of e-learning] (Mungania: 40). This may be a more critical factor when basic literacy and
English language competency is associated with limited formal education. While low levels of
prior educational attainment may lead to an initial reticence to take up e-learning, programs that are
marketed as directly work-relevant, skills focused, built around workers existing expertise, and
designed with low literacy in mind, can provide reticent participants with a platform for a positive
learning experience. Mungania also found that having a higherlevel of education does not
necessarily mean that one will be a successful online learner (Mungania: 40).
Other factors considered by Mungania in relation to their impact on e-learning uptake included
work position/status, location of study and prior e-learning experience. Each of these were found
not to be primary inhibitors of e-learning success, but often a secondary or tertiary barrier insofar as
they affected other factors such as ownership of a computer at home, which may mean limited
revision opportunities and a lower initial sense of confidence and competence.
Overcoming the barriers for older workers
Bowman and Kearns, and Mungania agree that all of these barriers, actual and perceived, primary
or secondary, can be overcome by e-learning programs that directly address each issue. Barrier
reduction strategies have to be planned, continuous, and systematic (Mungania: 8). These shouldaddress personal, situational, technological, organisational, instructional, and content strategies
(Mungania: 8). Computer [skills] training is fundamental, and even with highly educated and
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experienced workers, computer and internet skills [may] fall short; so these should notbe
assumed.(Mungania: 8). Appropriate induction, and ongoing skills building, will support the
positive self-efficacy that appears to be the primary foundation for e-learning.
Mungania further argues that the three pillars that determine the success or failure of e-learning
programs are the interconnectedness among persons, behaviour, and environment. These are the
three major areas that interventions should target (Mungania: 8).
Personal: program managers must ensure that e-learners have the prerequisite knowledgeand skills to participate, including computer competency through training, and time
management skills.
Beliefs and behaviours: e-learners must have high e-learning self-efficacy and takeresponsibility for their learning.
Environmental: organisations must support e-learning by offering a supportive culture,incentives, models, resources, and fostering e-learning self-efficacy (Mungania: 9).
These three domains operate in a triadic interchange: each needs to be present for a positive e-
learning outcome, and neglect of any of the three will undermine success. Mungania emphasisesthat organisations need to pay attention to end-user experiences, and respond to the specific needs
of their employees against her potential inhibitors (Mungania: 10). Training starting points should
be based on identified learner needs, remembering that the initial experience of confidence and self-
efficacy is the most crucial platform from which to launch self-confident and self-responsible e-
learning.
What emerged from both studies is the importance of a carefully planned, staged entry into ICT-
based learning, to build self-confidence and motivation amongst new learners. Mature aged learners
are likely to prefer to learn and to absorb at their own pace.
Once mature learners have confidence in using technology, they generally go on to learn more uses of the
technology for learning purposes. However a bad first e-learning experience is likely to put a mature age
learner off this approach for ever. E-learning can be done well or badly (Bowman and Kearns December
2007: 20).
Good Practice Guidelines
Bowman and Kearns (December 2007) list Good practice guidelines for e-learning use for the
mature age and Mungania provides an extensive list of barrier reduction strategies (Mungania:
8). In summary they jointly advise that:
Mature age trainees want to be clear about why they are undertaking training and willrespond most positively to training that directly addresses workplace issues, and is up to
date with content and issues.
Programs should actively dispel myths and stereotypes about the learning abilities of oldertrainees, female trainees, and trainees with English and general literacy issues. At the
outset, programs should outline the strategies that are in place to address these issues and
emphasise that many mature learners are passionate, motivated and capable learners. The
Community Services and Health Program at Gilles Plains Campus TAFE SA, actively built
on the benefits to others of seeing the outcomes and benefits of the early adopters efforts,
encouraging others to join in (Bowman and Kearns December 2007: 27).
A critical success factor is a strong orientation and induction phase. This will instilconfidence and motivation. Include all stakeholders in this phase: teachers, tutors, advisors,
IT support people etc, as well as the students. This phase should set the tone for a friendly,
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Programs should build on the life and work experience of trainees. Action learning can bevery effective in drawing on the tacit and professional knowledge of older workers, ensuring
the direct relevance of the learning and building new knowledge in collaborative ways.
Enable e-learners to share insights with each other and to build communities of practicethrough interactive communications and in face-to-face sessions that promote lively, sharedlearning, a social experience, and fun. Blended learning strategies have been found to be
the most effective for mature learners. In particular, blended learning environments provide
the social learning that is most productive for mature learners. Provide a blended learning
experience that is personal, social, flexible, creative and directly relevant to the learning
aims and capacities of the individual and group.
E-learning program design should enable the specific individual learning support needs oftrainees to be addressed, remembering that within any group, these needs will be diverse.
Programs should enable a personalised approach as far as possible through technology that
enables individual tutorials, guidance and mentoring. Provide friendly and readily accessible
support services. Ways of accessing these should be a feature of the induction process.
Explore new e-learning technologies that enable learners to work flexibly in terms of time,place, manner of learning. Programs should expect and cater for a variety of learning styles
and strategies. These can be ascertained early on by the use of recognised assessment tools.
Technology is a tool for learning and it should not determine the content of e-learning or itsprocesses. Content and learning processes should be determined by pedagogical experts and
enabled by technology. The most effective programs see technologists and educators come
together to develop targeted e-learning programs. Online teaching is a specific skill.
Older learners are likely to have a preference for starting at the low end of the technologycontinuum, with a measured progression through relevant technologies, including Web 2.0
technologies. Introduce selected learning technologies to mature age workers carefully inorder to build confidence, self-esteem and motivation in their use for learning.
Individual differences with regard to prior experience with IT, prior educational experience,learning confidence, language and literacy issues, access to a home computer for practice
(etc) will affect the rate of learning and should be taken into consideration when devising
the blended learning strategy. Competence in using e-learning technologies in interactive
ways is a key competency to be developed in older learners, as in all students.
Learning to learn is a critical competency and a positive first e-learning experience can be avaluable platform for building confidence and capacity for life-long learning. Use
technologies that encourage students reflection on their own learning processes, habits and
styles, and assist them to identify barriers in their learning habits and styles. Support them to
address these. Stretch, challenge and celebrate, but dont leave anyone behind. Discuss, test, and develop these guidelines further. The move into e-learning is a new
priority and the research base is at an early stage of development. Feedback from
practitioners will be critical in building on these good practice guidelines.
In essence, what is being described here is a process of learning in which pre-constructed online
programs provide a course content framework and the interactive components, be they online or
face-to-face, enable individualised interactions with and between students. Some programs, such as
the Knowledge Spaces technologies developed by Curtin Universitys Knowledge Technology
Studio e-Central provide personalised environments and adaptive user interfaces which enable
local components to be built into courses (Quinton, Dreher, Fisher 2006).
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However, Oliver and McMahon (2006: 61) who evaluated the use of e-learning learning objects
by teachers found that very few teachers had the technical skills, or time, to customise course
components, and many software programs also did not support content customisation. All of the
good practice reviews advocate a blended learning model and none advocate unfacilitated, non-
interactive learn-alone online programs.
Blended Learning
Bowman and Kearns found that a blended learning model best suits most mature age e-learners
and there is very strong support from other AFLF reports for blended e-learning models for other
target populations. Such an approach is based around an e-learning platform but provides
opportunities to interact with other learners through videoconferencing, and Web 2 interfaces
(blogging, chat rooms etc) and regular direct face-to-face/one-to-one support from tutors and/or
mentors and from individually responsive teachers. Bowman and Kearns study was focused on
VET/TAFE-based courses delivered primarily through e-learning, backed up by TAFE professional
teaching staff that enabled this blended delivery model. Bowman and Kearns found that online
learning in isolation was seen as generally lacking the benefits of blended learning combinations,
and others have also reported a boredom factor amongst isolated e-learners (Mallet, Howard, andThompson 2003). For older workers returning to vocational education, and especially for initially
reluctant or unconfident learners, e-learning should be social and fun and this is most easily done
through blended e-learning (Bowman and Kearns December 2007: 35).
In contrast,US researcher RodGithens (2007) recently found that older workers often prefer online
learning because of the privacy and safety aspects (i.e. they are not placed in a face-to-face
learning situation). Githens offers no gender analysis here, but his study may indicate a differing
preference between men and women. Indeed, Germanys Rainer Kuhlen (2006) has found
differences in the preferences of male and female e-learners. According to Kuhlen, men tend to see
distance education as a way to allow more access to education across vast distances whereas
women tend to see distance education as a way to connect people and work towards a common
agenda (Kuhlen 4). Women have a preference for group work, while men tend to favour individual
e-learning (Kuhlen 5). These differing outlooks will influence the sorts of course compositions each
will be drawn to. Non-blended e-learning may attract more male participants than female. Because
the aged care industry now predominantly employs women, blended learning may be the best
option. Kuhlen also found that women (including new IT graduates) tend to underestimate their
computer competency compared to males (Kuhlen 4). This means that support systems and
induction systems should be in place, even when higher competence is likely to be present.
Bowman and Kearns similarly found a preference for blended e-learning, but this is not surprising
given that their interviewees were TAFE teachers and managers who may show some professionalbias towards face-to-face learning. However, a few interviewees remarked that a social delivery
approach is possible fully online through the deployment of electronic white boards, chat rooms
and discussion boards to enable synchronous and asynchronous interaction. Shared online spaces
provide social environments which may be especially effective in remote area e-learning (Bowman
and Kearns December 2007: 22). The point stressed by Bowman and Kearns is that interaction with
other learners, whether that interaction is enabled by physical proximity or by virtual proximity,
creates learning communities that add value to the learning process. Effective adult learning needs
to be an iterative, rather than a purely reiterative process: mature learners operating in a
community of learners will want to put in, share, reflect and problem solve by drawing on their
mutual experience as a platform for learning, rather than be limited to a one-sided in-take process
(Bowman and Kearns Nov 2007: 14).
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The blended learning mix will be industry specific. In aged care the blend will need to address the
learning needs and preferences of a combination of older, female workers, some of whom will have
limited English literacy and limited experience of formal learning. In addition the blend will have
to address the learning needs of the many formally qualified nurses employed in the sector.
Bowman and Kearns identify the need for TAFE, VET and private RTOs to further develop e-learning teaching practice specific to the needs and preferences of older learners. The increasing
significance of older workers in the workforce requires policy directives in these learning/training
institutions that re-focus technology teaching from its focus, to date, on the young and the new to
the harnessing of e-learning in innovative ways to meet the particular needs and preferences of
older learners (Bowman and Kearns, ES, Dec 2007: 4).
E-Learners with English Language and Functional Literacy Support Needs
Barriers
According to the Australian Bureau of StatisticsAdult Literacy and Life Skills Survey 2006, a
considerable segment of Australias older workers experience difficulties with reading, writing
and numeracy. Such issues will need to be specifically addressed in program design if this segment
of older workers are to be enabled to take on e-learning (Bowman and Kearns ES December 2007:
3). Aged care may also provide employment openings for newly arrived younger migrants and
refugees who may similarly experience difficulties with English literacy. US researcher Rod
Githens calls on e-learning designers and planners [to] consider less educated groups when making
design decisions (eg reading level requirements, level of technical and computer expertise)
(Githens 2007:7). For groups with functional literacy and ICT literacy issues, there are advantages
[in] starting students in traditional [face-to-face teaching] mode [and] gradually introducing
students to online learning as they gain their skills and confidence levels (AFLF Summary: DigitalDivide R019RS:3).
AFLFs Summary: Learners with English Literacy Needs (R011RSc) 2000 Project Report Access
and Equity in Online Learning (August 2003) found that approximately 2.6 million Australians
have low literacy skills and another 3.6 million experience some difficulty in using printed
materials. Approximately 1 million of these do not have English as a first language. Some
proportion of these 1 million will be highly literate in their first language, but many will have low
literacy in their first language as well. Low literacyper se will present different issues for e-learning
program design than low English literacy alone.
The AFLF report found that:
The literacy skills of more than 6 million Australians have been shown to fall short of those which software
developers, Web designers and others in the ICT industry often appear to take for granted as normal and in the
natural possession of all users (AFLF August 2003).
The AFLF report also found that there is a danger that online learning will exaggerate the gap
where access and equity policies demand that the gap [between people with low and high literacy]
be closed (AFLF August 2003). In contrast, Wallace Galloway suggests that blogs, emails and
chat rooms may be productively used by e-learners whose first language is not English to practice
reading and writing skills, though the evidence as to the benefits for oral language acquisition are
less clear (Galloway 2007).
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Overcoming the Barriers
The AFLF report recommends that:
Access and equity needs to become part of the online learning culture Advice from target population advocates and cultural specialists should be sought at all
levels from policy development, program development and translation of onlineenvironments
Hands-on, face to face support be provided by specialist language teachers who are alsoproficient in computer technology
New manipulative skills such as typing, mouse clicking, scrolling, drop-down boxes and thespecialist way language is applied to technology should be delivered with comprehensive
language support
Human interaction with teachers, mentors and other students should be fostered in thelearning process
Learning materials for students with low literacy should be intrinsically interesting, directlyrelevant to their own concerns and their information and action demands.
Low literacy/low English language learners are also likely to have low incomes due to the interplay
of multiple social exclusion factors. Their access to home computers and software should not be
assumed. Comprehensive technical support in accessible language should be readily available.
Marketing information about e-learning opportunities should also be available in community
languages. Otherwise, many potential learners may be lost at the first hurdle.
The detailed AFLF reportsLearners with English Literacy Needs (August 2003) andDigital Divide
(September 2003)should be consulted for detailed advice on low literacy e-learning pedagogies and
program design.
The Multiplier Effect of Disadvantage and E-learning
The Digital Bridge Unit at the University of Adelaides Australian Institute for Social Research
(AISR) undertook research to evaluate the barriers to e-learning opportunities for women, people
with a disability and indigenous people in metropolitan and regional areas and to recommend ways
of overcoming those barriers, particularly in relation to connectivity (access to hardware and
bandwidth infrastructure), capability (skills and skills training), and content (appropriate language,
culture and location).
Barriers
The study found that learners with low literacy and numeracy levels face significant challenges in
participating in VET programs regardless of delivery mode and the new digital literacy may see
the gap widen. Low literacy individuals often acquire a basic digital literacy but this must be
supported by formal learning opportunities to enable them to stay abreast of the continuing
development of ICT infrastructure (AISR 2006: 8).
The study locates the digital divide as a symptom of wider social inequities, with the potential to
entrench or even exaggerate existing inequities and social exclusion (AISR 2006: 3, also Segarra
2004). It found increased take-up of e-learning in the two years to April 2006 (AISR 2006: 7),
partly due to the increased availability of broadband, but also due to an apparent increase in
demand, especially from young people in rural and remote areas, and from corporate sector
employees.
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The report concluded that demand seems to be coming from students rather than teachers, but
predominantly from younger learners (AISR 2006: 7). RTOs report older age groups as often
being less interested in e-learning and more reliant on traditional delivery methods (AISR 2006: 8).
Small private RTOs have been slower to take up e-learning, due to costs, but large RTOs tend to see
e-learning as an opportunity that is essential for their long term sustainability (AISR 2006: 8).
Census data indicate considerable inequities in the ownership, access to and use of computers withvariations in income and educational qualifications. People on low incomes, people who do not
have tertiary education, women, people in rural and remote Australia, people of ATSI descent,
people with a disability, people from non-English speaking backgrounds, unemployed people, and
people over 55 years of age are less likely to have a home computer and internet connection than
others. Aged care employees intersect a number of these categories (The Australian Institute for
Social Research Adelaide University 2006: 9). The Digital Bridge Unit study recommended the
development of e-learning deliveries that do not rely on text-based/written communication models
(AISR 2006:17).
The major barriers identified by the Digital Bridge Unit as limiting the participation of
disadvantaged population groups are:
Connectivity:o Cost of hardware and software, and connectiono Lack of appropriate infrastructure away from urban centreso Poor design and layout of web platforms
Content-related:o Learning processes hindered by subject content that does not easily translate onlineo Lack of plain English usage online and in manuals
Capability:o Inadequate induction for students andteacherso Inadequate or lack of support for studentso Inadequate or lack of interaction between students and other students or teacherso Limited support and professional development for teacherso Lack of a supportive institutional learning culture (AISR 2006: 12).
Kilpatrick and Bound (2003, cited in AISR 2006: 13) found that geography is itself a barrier to
successful e-learning. They found that the further away from the physical location of the RTO e-
learning provider, the less likely was their experience of online learning to be positive. For lower
socioeconomic groups, connectivity-related costs are intensified thus compounding thedisadvantage of distance. Poor levels of digital literacy are associated with a lack of confidence in
using ICT and in combination these lead to a self-perpetuating pattern of exclusion in which a
lack of knowledge underpins and is compounded by fear (AISR 2006: 14,15).
Overcoming the Barriers
As with other researchers, the Digital Bridge Unit found that the most successful e-learning
programs for digitally disadvantaged populations keep the specific needs of those populations in
focus. Technologies must be made accessible through systems, programs and pedagogies that
generate positive e-learning experiences as a platform for further, confident, self-motivated
learning. A lack of provision of any of these factors will impact inequitably on socially,economically and geographically disadvantaged students. This study also noted, significantly, the
teachers ability to use technology as a critical success factor, both in regard to the teachers
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computer literacy and their understanding of effective online pedagogy (The Australian Institute for
Social Research Adelaide University 200615). This research found few professional development
courses to equip online teachers for effective e-learning delivery (AISR 2006:15). The Digital
Bridge Unit notes studies by Ladyshesky (2005) and Brennan (2003) which address this relatively
new field of online pedagogy for populations with limited ICT literacy and/or limited general
literacy (AISR 2006:17).
Brennan (2003, cited in AISR 2006:15-18) found that effective online pedagogy for people with
limited literacy skills focuses on 8 factors (which all build the ability to learn):
Reducing reliance on text Enabling students to explore and value their intellectual, social and cultural backgrounds Developing their knowledge beyond the transmission and assessment of content.
(Researchers surveyed above would challenge this. The implication of other literature
reviewed above is that skills acquisition will be most effective if it is built around the use of
skills specific to the program in use: that regular use of these will generate confidence and
competence to gradually extend capacity.)
Reflecting on their own learning Being part of an inclusive learning environment Communicating extensively with their teachers andwith their e-learning peers. This fosters a
group identity which connects them with their learning and with the broader social
environment
Becoming self-regulating and engaged with their own learningThe Digital Bridge Unit study supports other findings noted above that a blended approach is the
most effective for disadvantaged learners, combining online delivery with face-to-face meetings,
creating a learning community, enabling teachers to immediately assess and respond to individual
difficulties and changing needs (AISR 2006: 18 citing Gattas 2003). This is of particular relevanceto aged care industry e-learners. Proactive support should encompass both learning issues and
technology issues. This study argues that if the content is appropriately designed, and delivered
with the appropriate pedagogy, the need for learner support is diminished (AISR 2006: 19). It also
finds that lack of culturally appropriate learning is considered to be a major cause of unsuccessful
completions as is teacher or provider insensitivity to cultural and language issues (AISR 2006: 19,
21).
In relation to the specific needs of the three target populations, the Digital Bridge Unit study
identified the need to actively promote bottom-up ownership by indigenous communities of e-
learning; the need to build confidence, competence and digital literacy for older e-learners; and the
need to have processes that support the inclusion of literacy-challenged participants. These are thenecessary precondition for successful uptake of e-learning. Good practice examples include the
creative use of Toolboxes such as those provided through the Australian Flexible Learning
Framework, professional development initiatives to support e-learning teachers; and platforms to
support social learning, eg audio conferencing for virtual classrooms (AISR 2006: 22, 28).
Women are not inherently disadvantaged by digital learning, but Arbaugh (2000, cited in AISR
2006: 26) found that women are more likely to show a preference for collaborative learning and
interactive applications of these methods. Women are likely to have family and child
responsibilities, limited access to technology and to the internet, more limited information literacy,
and less disposable income than men (AISR 2006:26-27).
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When a group of low income women potential e-learners were provided with computers, internet
access, online courses, a range of supports (including e-learning specific supports but also including
child care) they and their families increased their computer-related literacy and were able to develop
employment skills (AISR 2006 citing Gatta 2003).
There is some evidence that courses designed for a specific community produce positive results.
The successful Barrier Reef demonstration program noted above, for example, invited participantsto build on their own professional knowledge and experience. Kilpatrick and Bound (2003)
consider that there may be a role for client-focused training brokers to assist clients to establish
self-sustaining relationships between clients (individuals and organisations) and providers (AISR
2006: 29). The bigger point is that one-size-fits-all courses wont work: the most effective e-
learning programs are the result of task-focused partnerships between organisations and RTOs.
A further component identified by the Digital Bridge Unit is the value of incentives to encourage
people to engage in e-learning and to break the cycle of negative attitudes, limited understanding
and lack of commitment to e-learning. Incentives may be certificates, workplace recognition or
rostered time-off for e-learning. Organisation-based e-learning champions will tend to promote e-
learning within an organisations culture (AISR 2006: 32-33). Kilpatrick and Bound (2003) alsoemphasise the value of locally relevant content, rather than centralised (eg state level) content in
terms of the development of a sense of ownership (cited in AISR 2006: 33). This has the added
advantage of drawing in a local community of practice, for example if the local library is brought
in as an e-learning partner.1
Young People and E-learning
To date, the aged care sector has not attracted a large proportion of young people to its workforce.
However, it is a potential source of workers at both shop floor and professional entry levels, and
e-learning can support entry pathways.
Barriers
Young e-learners, in general, have quite distinct preferences in terms of program design, and are
likely to have substantial familiarity and competence with technology. However, many young
people will also feature as a subset of ICT disadvantaged populations. Some factors apply as much
to younger learners as to older learners. For example, Drinis and Corrigan (2004) found that
information needs to be relevant to the young persons work role, as it does for older e-learners; and
that they will want to put their learning into practice. Hence, the close incorporation of the formal e-
learning with shop-floor tasks may be an incentive for e-learning. But the AFLF researchers advise
that young staff may prefer busier, less formal program layouts of the sort that might put off oldere-learners (AFLF what matters e-learning for youth, citing E. Drinis & A. Corrigan 2004).
Overcoming the Barriers
Young people may respond positively to a game playapproach. Whereas older e-learners want to
be directed through a process with predictable navigation, younger game-players want to compete
and choose the way to move within the learning experience.
1A number of Victorian mental health services are piloting an online mental health triage scale project. An entry to the online site
is at http://www.learnprn.com/index.php?p=elearning . A feature of the website is the option to further enhance your organisation's
training portfolio, by convert[ing] your existing in-house programs to eLearning, allowing you to offer a versatile training package
for all staff.
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Kristine Peters found that young trade learners need their online learning to be interactive, with
small amounts of text (Peters March 2005, citing Kavadis 2003). They want realistic scenarios with
lifelike simulations that challenge them to move through different levels with more difficulty and
added factors, presented via state of the art technology (AFLF what matters e-learning for youth,
citing P.A. Sphika 2003). They want learner-directed rather than teacher-directed training.
Research findings indicate that for younger e-learners, theory is deemed an unnecessarydistraction from the main game which is to test concepts. Computer savvy young people respond to
learning that is more organic inviting lateral learning with many applications for each concept.
They are more polyfocal, concentrating on many things at the same time, which also means
reduced attention spans and the need for a quick fix when seeking information. Research
findings are also that e-learning presentations that seek to respond to this mode of learning may
introduce the risk that learning is scattered, with insufficient reference to a theoretical structure that
links learning to existing knowledge. The absence of theory as a formal stage in the process
means that it is essential to embed theory in the design of learning at the testing and practice stages
(AFLF what matters e-learning for youth). Short online time-span preferences are particularly seen
in young males who also have little tolerance for delays (AFLF what matters e-learning for youth,
citing AFLF Women learners in Vocational Education and Training 2003 and J Bowes 2004).
However, it appears that most of this research is gender-blind. Indeed, Peters notes that young
females may respond to e-learning quite differently from their male counterparts. Young women,
like their older female colleagues, value face-to-face interaction (AFLF citing M. Dickie & I.
Fitzgerald 2004; Peters 2004: 4). Both genders want training in bite sized chunks, just in time [ie,
directly and immediately applicable] and that articulates into formal accreditation which can be
transported to their next position (AFLF citing K. Peters & C. Lloyd 2003). Individual organisations
will have to take on board that they are training for the sector, so that the costs of an
organisations training will be mutually recouped as staff circulate between organisations in these
days of casualised labour and short-term contracts.
The AFLF recognises that there may be some disadvantages consequent on the extensive roll out of
e-learning made possible by the envisaged extension of broadband infrastructure in Australia. For
example, the social interaction that comes with on-site group learning and which has so many
benefits for young people in rural and remote locations, will be inhibited if e-learning becomes
predominant (AFLF what matters e-learning for youth, after B. Golding 2001 and K. Peters & C.
Lloyd 2003). On the other hand, e-learning enables culturally-specific materials appropriate to
community and relationship frameworks to be provided to young Indigenous people in remote
communities. In those situations, however, the e-learning should take place in a group situation with
face-to-face support, especially where English literacy and technical skills may be limited. Where
English language is limited, e-learning may enable the use of local Indigenous languages.
The AFLF reminds us that while young people may respond positively to e-learning delivered
through new technologies such as 3G and palm-sized computers, mp3/podcasts, blogs and wikis,
these new platforms will rapidly be superseded by the next generation of technologies.
Obsolescence of technological platforms needs to be assumed. The AFLF also argues that for young
people, learning is socially situated and needs to respond to the new forms of tribal community
that are enabled through mobile technologies.
Indigenous Learners and E-learning
The AFLF has had an Indigenous Engagement strategy since 2005. It held a best practice forum inNovember 2007 and showcased Indigenous Engagement demonstrations in Brisbane in December
2007.
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The AFLFs Cross-cultural Issues in Content Development and Teaching Online (July 2004) advises
that the effectiveness of e-learning courses will reflect not just the appropriateness of curriculum
content, but the pedagogical frameworks within which they are delivered, and different
perspectives can be demonstrated through both practice and design (AFLF Cross-cultural issues,
2004: 2). Program designs should take account of differing communication patterns. The AFLF
advises that instances of miscommunication in online exchanges between culturally diverselearners and facilitators are common, and while these cannot be completely avoided, these may
lead students to question the knowledge, the merit of participation, or feel disenfranchised, leading
to unnecessarily high drop-out rates and unsuccessful completions. Cultural inclusion is a major
focus of the work of the AFLF and their website should be consulted by course designers.
3.2 General Barriers & Strategies for all Types of Learners
Fears about approaching computer-based learning technologies will be particularly pronounced
when ICT is a principal component of the learning/teaching mode. On a practical level, programs
that are technically difficult to operate will have a negative impact, especially on the self-
confidence of new learners. Program navigation should, as far as possible, be intuitive.
Instructions must be clear and logical, from the most basic information on how to log on, to how to
save, how to navigate around the site, how to manage files, how to download etc as well as the more
program-specific instructions. Courses should build in the constant practice of ICT skills to embed
them in the learners skills repertoire. No part of the process should be assumed to be obvious and
all demonstrations and training in all procedures should be incorporated in an ongoing basis for new
and returning e-learners (Mungania: 59). Frustration with technology should not create a barrier for
inexperienced e-learners but often does. Initial and ongoing skills support for e-learners is a basic
requirement.
Mungania also advises that students should not be overloaded with information. All unnecessaryinformation should be removed and programs should enable participants to skip sections or move
directly to the evaluation of sections they are comfortable with. Regular progress reporting should
be available to encourage participants. Various online techniques can be used to ensure that only
those reaching a required standard can progress to next stage. High quality course input will
motivate participants to make high quality responses.
Action learning is a process that enables learning to be applied immediately, enabling practical
feedback and reflection. Adult learning programs should provide opportunities during the course to
practice the new learning. Similarly, testing and assessment should invite reflection, discussion and
interaction with other students. A Department of Health and Human Services Tasmania e-learning
demonstration program emphasised the value that comes form allow[ing] learners to interact witheach other, even during the assessment if possible. They advise training managers to trust your
learners, and recognise that discussing the answers with work colleagues is not cheating: it is how
adults learn from each other. Testing should actually add value to the learning process. Program
managers should encourage feedback from learners who feel aspects of the course do not reflect
best practice or the shop floor experience of staff.
Technological factors also loomed as a barrier to uptake of e-learning in some parts of Australia
with band-width problems inhibiting uptake. This problem, frequently noted in studies of the uptake
of e-learning in rural and remote Australia, is now being addressed by the Commonwealth as a
policy priority.
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Program designers should not rely on businesses or home users having state of the art technology to
carry the e-learning program. The size of downloads should be limited so that these are
commensurate with the technology users are likely to have at home, which may be cheaper and
older than state of the art computer technology.
Best practice suggests that e-learners should have access to all hours technology support, with
access that does not entirely depend on internet access. A mechanism for reporting technologicaldifficulties and ensuring a quick response process needs to be provided. Learners should be able to
re-start a test in case of technology failure, rather than having to begin again. Search engine and
help functions also need to be provided in the site.
3.3 Barriers to uptake of e-learning by Employers and Organisations
A recent literature survey and a survey of e-learning managers in 39 Industry Training
Organisations (ITOs) in New Zealand found the following nine barriers to adopting e-learning:
Lack of appropriate technology within an organisation, especially in small and mediumorganisations
The lack of ongoing technical and learning support for participants with limited IT skills Lack of support and commitment from senior and middle management [a moderate barrier] The cost (in terms of time, human resources, and financial) of e-learning implementation and
maintenance of e-learning, especially for small organisations
The organisation being able to access educationally designed, organisation-specific andengaging content
Resistance to change from those familiar and comfortable with traditional learning andteaching approaches, especially in small organisations
Lack of basis IT skills in an industry, especially in small organisations Motivating particular learners to complete e-learning courses, especially in small
organisations
Organisational lack of knowledge on how to plan for the implementation of e-learning, again,especially in small organisations (Elliott and Clayton: 244-247).
Some of these barriers loom larger for small organisations than for bigger ones, for example
availability of technology onsite. However, organisational cultural barriers may be as strong in
large as in small or medium sized businesses.
The majority of ITOs in NZ are conscious that e-learning increases organisational flexibility in the
presentation of training, enabling flexibility in time, pace and place, as well as delivery to a large
number of people simultaneously. However, the initial implementation and ongoing maintenancecosts in terms of time, financial and human resource costs, are seen as major barriers, especially to
small and medium sized organisations (Elliott and Clayton 2007).
Mack Consulting and AFLF researchers (December 2007), investigating the enablers and barriers to
small business uptake of e-learning, found that while most businesses provide some informal on-
the-job training (often short-term and unplanned) only about 12% of small businesses provided
structured training using computer assisted methods. In contrast, some 40% of small businesses
claimed to have a relationship with a training provider, providing a platform for the dissemination
of more comprehensive e-training (Mack Consulting Group [a] December 2007; Mack Consulting
Group [b] December 2007). These low levels of e-learning engagement contrast with big business
where about 70% of businesses have some staff so engaged and most expect that figure to increase
(APT Strategies September 2006: 5).
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Mack Consulting found that users of e-learning recognise its benefits in terms of convenience,
flexibility, provision of formal training materials, and easy access to training options, but many
employers had not considered e-learning as an option. Others consider face-to-face learning to be
more appropriate for their training needs.
Perceivedbarriers to the uptake of e-learning by small businesses include:
the cost in terms of investments of time and money; technology limitations; workload pressures; lack of an e-learning champion in the organisation; preference for informal hands-on learning; a belief that e-learning was not relevant to their business; and a general lack of awareness about e-learning training options.
Small business managers may also experience a lack of a sense of competence with computer based
technologies and exposure to e-learning, and may themselves need assistance with reaching a
confidence threshold that enables them to take their organisation into e-learning.
Persuading management to invest time and money in e-learning, (including providing technical
capacity, ensuring supervisors are supportive, providing employees with time off for e-learning,
ensuring that the e-learning is rewarded in terms of job pathways and business targets and assisting
to overcome negative stereotypes about e-learning) may all require strategic input from training
providers (AFLF Practical Guide to e-learning for Industry, Section 1.4).
Good Practice Lessons
Good practice lessons from these two AFLF studies, from the point of view of e-learning providers,
demonstrate the need to recognise that small business is time-poor and that programs need to
address specific and immediate needs of a business.
In small business, the owner/manager is the key determinant of culture and direction, so e-learning
marketing needs to focus on the benefits for the business and be directed at that key person/s rather
than government agendas (Dawe and Nguyen 2007). Dawe and Nguyen (2007) found that small
business will pay for education and training if managers/owners see the value in it for their
business. Small business learns through doing, with the focus on current or real issues in the
workplace, and through social networks learning from other business people. Business clusters
and mentoring networks can provide an entry point for seeding e-learning.
RTOs may also offer training needs analysis, and benchmarking against other organisations as a
means of alerting business to the role that e-learning might play in their business planning. The
AFLF Industry Engagement ProjectReview of business cases of the 2005-2007 industry e-learning
demonstrations Final Report, of February 2008 found that the skills and support of the partnering
RTO was critical to the success of the e-learning implementation and that initial success produces
further enthusiasm for e-learning and further uptake (4). Initial success is critical.
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Dawe and Nguyen found that successful small business-focused e-learning will demonstrate three
essential elements:
a clear focus on business-specific needs a personal approach through a recognised local facilitator or business service organisation
that is able to reach small business operators who may not be positive about training
flexible provision which carefully individualises training information, content and delivery tothe needs of each small business.
Dawe and Nguyen identified 10 strategies that encourage the uptake of e-learning by small business
and advise that e-learning providers should market e-learning against these strategies. They are:
providing opportunities to share skills, knowledge and experience with other small businesspeople
linking training to business performance increased profit, growth or survival linking training to specific stages in the business cycle (that is start-up, crisis and/or survival,
growth and/or expansion and export and/or internationalisation)
contacting small business managers personally to analyse their business needs providing ongoing business-specific support through a business service organisation minimising time spent away from the workplace integrating formal training and learning with informal learning processes in the workplace lowering costs of training by collaborating with other businesses or through financial
incentives, such as a government subsidy or interest free loans
ensuring that facilitators and trainers have the appropriate networks and experience to enablethem to be trusted and respected by all business participants, especially in the case of
Indigenous Australian small business operators
planning the strategy with small businesses and business service organisations.Marie Jasinski has distilled some key findings about the processes by which e-learning becomes
embedded in VET offerings. She considers VET providers as essentially small businesses, bringing
the same considerations to the adoption of innovations as any other small business. The interrelated
enablers she identified are a work culture that:
embraces and supports innovation; a robust technology infrastructure with attention to technologies that will support e-learning; a senior champion who drives the process; a willingness to consult and share;
supportive managers and peers; and a general organisational commitment that e-learning is a desired and valued component of a
teaching and learning repertoire and worth the time and effort (Jasinski 2007: 4).
Industry e-learning demonstration reviews
The AFLF Industry Engagement ProjectReview of business cases of the 2005-2007 industry e-
learning demonstrations Final Report(February 2008) has found that their demonstration action
research pilots have enabled participants to develop e-learning communities of practice and
technological prototypes that have allowed end-users to make quick-time amendment when
difficulties are identified or when local responses have been required. One respondent identified a
benefit as being a continuous and positive feedback loop to developing and sustaining trainingneeds for the future (Review of business cases: 7).
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In each case, the ability to develop local, directly and instantly/short delay relevant materials that
address real, identified workplace issues is a real benefit.
One barrier to the uptake of nationally provided e-learning may be a perception that it can not be
locally relevant. The local collegiate experience derived from developing locally relevant e-
learning materials in conjunction with an RTO has the value-added spin-off of a general up-skilling
in regard to IT (Review of business cases: 7). The review also notes unexpected negatives,primarily that the development of the projects at the local level often took longer than expected. It is
intended that these demonstrations will provide prototypes for various industries and training
components, but local input at any stage will require an investment in time. Most of the feedback
indicated that the positive benefits of locally relevant amendments to programs outweighed the
negatives and that the extra time was, on the whole, viewed as a positive investment in the future of
the organisation, especially in terms of enhanced training capacity (Review of business cases: 7, 8).
Feedback from the AFLF demonstrations may be of relevance to ACSAs own business case
demonstration. Most of the demonstrations moved fairly rapidly from pilot stage to incorporation of
the new programs into the organisations standard training offerings as real world applications,
however some were not successful in that transition. Barriers to the achievement of the businesscase goals were:
Technical issues with applications Problems finding skilled educationalists to assist More re-work on the pilot than expected as a result of user feedback Logistics problems relating to computer access for e-learners for staff who do not typically
have or require computer access (eg factory workers, kitchen staff)
Internal organisational barriers with management or internal IT departments.Project managers in all cases felt these barriers could be overcome with more time. Time wasitself a barrier in terms of the project time-frames, indicating that establishment phases both
proof of concept or selling e-learning, and providing solutions to e-learning issues as they arise
may often be longer than anticipated (Review of business cases: 8-9). Some demonstrations lost
momentum (Review of business cases: 9), suggesting that lack of enthusiasm, competence and
leadership amongst the team may be a barrier to success. It is at this point that a champion may be
required to take hold of the project and guide it to completion.
One respondent from an apparently stalled project noted that if we implemented e-learning too
quickly before everyone was ready for it we could end up killing it (Review of business cases: 9)
which is a learning that the aged care industry may find particularly relevant. The reviewers
themselves note the need to bring everyone along for success but also note the motivational benefitsthat may accrue from having a deadline (Review of business cases: 9).
A point of interest to the success of ACSAs own program may relate to the identified importance
of the diffusion process. The experience of the demonstration project managers is that diffusion
should focus on three issues:
explaining the key benefits of e-learning why it is worth pursuing e-learning; what e-learning looks like in practice [in terms of] tangible examples of what e-learning
in practice actually was; and
how to implement e-learning, again on a practical, tangible level (Review of business cases:12-13).
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A lack of tangible what and how information in the aged care sector may itself be a barrier to
uptake at both management and staff levels. The specific message should, of course, be targeted to
the specific audience, but a high level of pre-existing knowledge and motivation should not be
assumed. A thorough appreciation of where an audience might be placed with their training
programs, knowledge of e-learning and capability for e-learning might guide the nature of the
messages presented through diffusion activities (Review of business cases: 14). The AFLF business
case review (February 2008) also noted that peak bodies with strong existing links to their industryhad been the most successful in diffusion (Review of business cases: 12).
The AFLF Industry Engagement Project further conducted strategic conversations with industry
which identified a perceived lack of understanding by RTOs of real industry needs and issues with
the use of unskilled trainers rather than skilled and experienced teachers. The success of e-learning
depends so much on deployment of appropriate pedagogies that the input of experienced teachers is
vital (AFLF Strategic conversation September 2006). The conversation also revealed:
Limited understanding of how to initiate e-learning at specific workplaces Learner perceptions that e-learning excludes face-to-face learning and social learning The belief that e-learning does not bring the expected benefits of training: travel, social
networking etc
Techno-phobia, lack of practical skills Resistance by mature age workers Concerns about upfront costs, actual and perceived Concerns about access to technology, server speed, computer overload Resistance from IT departments Perceived difficulties in keeping up with new technology Apprehensions about Telstra infrastructure issues (Strategic conversation: 12 of 28)The strategic conversation also identified the business bottom-line benefit of just-in-time trainingas a remedy to the challenges of skills and staff shortages, and to productivity and safety issues
(Strategic conversation: 13 of 28) and endorsed the value of e-learning champions, strategic
partnerships and the influencer model linking the VTE, RTO and Industry partners. Along with
the use of technological developments, blended learning was seen as the way forward (Strategic
conversation: 15 of 28).
4. Lessons from the Demonstrations.The AFLF Industry Engagement Project conducted around 40 e-learning demonstration pilots in
2005-7. The satisfaction reports from these demonstrations have been reviewed for their relevanceto ACSAs industry based project. The 2007 demonstration satisfaction reports provided more
comprehensive feedback than those submitted in 2006.
Individual Demonstration Learnings
The North Coast Area Health Service (NSW Health) Project.Key points from the satisfaction report were:
o the variety of operating systems across participating campuses presented atechnical barrier;
o the need for the sector to give the lead as to content and pedagogy, and not be leadby IT and multi-media developers; and
o the need to lobby NSW Health to support a central e-learning system23
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The North Coast Area Health Service (NSW Health) Project e-learning was a blended model,
involving a comprehensive face-to-face induction program where participants met their TAFE
advisors and assessors and were given contact details at this face-to-face meeting. The induction
day also functioned to bring all participants from rural locations together, creating something of a
learning community. Each participant was allocated a learning mentor. Most were new to e-
learning. Participants were given time-off from work duties to complete the e-learning, which askedparticipants to use a collecting evidence assessment model, which also enables learners to skip
direct to assessment on units they felt competent with already. The report notes that each screen
provided easy navigation across the whole site and the process was deliberately intuitive. The
program was seen as providing lots of support and practical encouragement to learners.
Department of Health and Human Services, Tasmania (Fire and Emergency Awareness e-learning project).
Some members of the project team had limited e-learning experience, so this was a collaborative
learning experience from the start. TAFE Tasmania provided the e-learning expertise and training
and Leaders were also learners in this model. This team drew in experts and spent a lot of timeidentifying common and consistent content, thus the process again had a value-add component at
the outset in terms of the development of a learning community. The time spent debating and
discussing the content, and how the learners should interact with the content was considered time
very well spent. It reinforced to the project team that this project is about learning Fire and
Emergency Awareness and that the e-learning format was the vehicle and method to deliver the
learning. Glitches included difficulties with navigation, font too small, the need for more detailed
explanation for novice computer users, and requests for certificate on completion.
Learnings from the Tasmanian DHHS project included:
The need to have the project overseen by a dedicated person to ensure it is kept on track Time spent getting the content and the language right is a valuable investment Concentrate on how the learners will interact with the material: learner-focused Use a variety of diffusion methods.
One of the interesting aspects of the Tasmanian DHHS pilot was that those formulating the e-
learning project themselves went through an online meeting technology learning process so that
each project team member could access the online meetings from their work computer or laptop,
perhaps putting them into the frame of mind of their e-learners. In their online meetings they used
the software to view and discuss the content for the e-learning module on Fire and Emergency
Awareness, a mandatory annual requirement for 100% of staff working in acute and primary healthcare, including aged care where it is covered by Australian Aged Care Standards. The e-learning
module is intended to provide learning in conjunction with face-to-face delivery.
Attempting to provide a common learning platform relevant to diverse campuses proved a
challenge, but:
As the discussions of the Project Team [and drafted experts including from TAFE and OH&S experts]
evolved, it became clear that there was a common set of information, responses and understanding that existed
across all facilities, and that the differences that are in place, can be used as a prompt to have the learner find
out about their own workplace, and therefore enhance the learning (Department of Health and Human
Services, Tasmania Fire and Emergency Awareness e-learning project satisfaction report 2007).
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They also found that the time spent debating and discussing the content, and how the learners
should interact with the content was time very well spent. This e-learning package, directly
addressing potential emergency situations and staff and client survival, requires 100% accuracy and
therefore perhaps requires more concerted application by learners than some other e-learning
packages where lapses in applied learning may not be so costly. The